|   | Sourcing strategies overviewEnterprise Planning works with five sources of supply: - Production — manufacture goods at a production facility
 - Purchase — acquire goods from a business partner
 - Distribution — acquire goods from elsewhere in your
		  company or from an affiliated company
 - Repetitive — manufacture goods based on a limited number
		  of predefined configurations
 - Subcontract — outsourcing parts, or the whole manufacture
		  to another company
 
 Note If multisite functionality is active, sourcing strategies
				are defined per planning cluster. Sourcing strategies
				have priority over the default supply source. If an applicable
				sourcing strategy exists, Enterprise Planning uses the sourcing strategy, and ignores the default
				source. 
 Sourcing strategy If you want to use more than one source of supply, or
			 deviate from the default source in one particular scenario, you must define a sourcing strategy for the item involved. You can define sourcing strategies in the Sourcing Strategy (cprpd7110m000) session. Scenario and validity period A sourcing strategy is valid for a particular scenario. A sourcing strategy is valid for a particular time period.
			 You can enter an effective date and an expiry date for a source strategy to
			 determine for which time period the sourcing strategy is valid. Sourcing strategies for planning clusters and item
		  groups Unit effectivity Source allocation rule When you define a sourcing strategy, you must choose
				between the following: Source allocation rule: Percentage If the source
			 allocation rule is Percentage, you define
			 the percentage for each source in the Sourcing Strategy (cprpd7110m000) session. In master-based planning, LN distributes the supply plan according to these percentages for each plan period. In order-based planning, the percentages can be used in two ways: - If you select the Allow Multiple Sources per Demand check box in the Generate Order Planning (cprrp1210m000) session or the Generate Order Planning (Item) (cprrp1220m000) session, LN uses the percentages
				to divide a single requirement over the various sources.
 - If you clear the Allow Multiple Sources per Demand check box, LN tries to approximate
				the percentages as closely as possible, but assigns each requirement to one
				source. In other words, LN does not split planned orders.
 
 For more information about source allocation in order
			 planning, refer to Example: source allocation in order planning. Source allocation rule: Priority If the source allocation rule is Priority, you define the priority for each source. The
			 priority source-allocation rule only applies to order planning. In master
			 planning, a priority source-allocation rule is interpreted as a Percentage source-allocation rule. For more information about sourcing allocation rule Priority, refer to online manual topic Example: source allocation in order planning. Note: If LN has first attempted to cover a requirement
			 by selecting the source Purchase, and this source cannot fulfill the requirement,
			 the next step depends on the question whether the plan item's supplier is a single-source supplier. The behavior depends on the Preferred field in the Items - Purchase Business Partner (tdipu0110m000) session: Preferred is set to Single Source If the supplier cannot fulfill the required demand, LN uses the
				lower-priority supply sources ( Production or Distribution) from the sourcing strategy. Preferred is set to Preferred If the supplier cannot fulfill the required demand, LN generates a  planned production order with an empty supplier
				field. 
 Minimum and maximum volume Per supply source you can define minimum and maximum
			 volumes, and specify the time period for which these limits apply. If the order volume for a specific source exceeds the
			 maximum volume (within the specified time period), LN can move part of the
			 volume to another source. If the order volume for a specific source drops below the
			 minimum volume, LN can
			 use a larger part from the required quantity to generate planned orders for
			 that source. As a result, the total ordered quantity for other sources will be
			 reduced. Note: Do
			 not confuse the minimum volume fields with the minimum order quantity defined in the item data. LN does not create
			 orders for more than the required quantity, even if the order volume falls
			 below the minimum volume. 
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